Handanağa Mosque

Audio Narration:

Construction Year:

15th century

Location:

Beyoğlu, İstanbul

Ordered by:

Handan Agha (One of the aghas of Mehmed the Conqueror period)

Architect:

Unknown

- Changes the building has undergone since its construction
  • The mosque was built in the 15th century by Handan Agha, one of the aghas of Mehmed the Conqueror.
  • It is decorated with Iznik tiles added in the 16th century and majolica tiles added in the 19th century. The mihrab wall is covered with tiles from the 16th and 17th centuries.
  • The building was renovated by the Shipyard Chief Kıblelizade Mehmed Bey during the reign of Ahmed III (1703-1730), and Sultan’s Lodge was added during the reign of Selim III (1789-1807).
  • It underwent extensive repairs by various foundations in the 1960s. Initially used as a boathouse, its lower floor lost this feature due to the filling of the Golden Horn shore.
- Prominent features of the mosque
  • It has a rectangular plan close to a square, a hipped roof and a tile roof.
  • The minaret is made of brick, covered with plaster and painted; it sits on a square base. There are stone consoles under the balcony.
  • The total area of ​​the mosque, which is built on an area of ​​300 m², including its courtyard, is 470 m².
  • The two-story Royal Pavillion (Hünkar Kasrı) built by Selim III is adjacent to the mosque. There is a two-room layout on the upper floor and a large undivided space on the lower floor.
  • The narthex of the mosque is four meters wide and covered with a flat wooden roof.